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Test your basic knowledge |
Trivia: Musical Terms
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Subject
:
trivia
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
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study here
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Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. A symbol in sheet music that returns a note to its original pitch after it has been augmented or diminished.
Whole-tone scale
Natural
Musette
Glissando
2. An important characteristic of the Romantic period. It is a style where the strict tempo is temporarily abandoned for a more emotional tone.
Rubato
Chorale
Triad
Drone
3. A period in history during the 18th and early 19th centuries where the focus shifted from the neoclassical style to an emotional - expressive - and imaginative style.
Cadenza
Grave
Consonance
Romantic
4. Arrangement of music for a combined number of instruments.
Fifth
Instrumentation
Quintet
Musette
5. A curve over notes to indicate that a phrase is to be played legato.
Etude
Slur
Orchestra
Espressivo
6. The retuning of a stringed instrument in order to play notes below the ordinary range of the instrument or to produce an usual tone color.
Scordatura
Opera
March
Cavatina
7. A scale consisting of only whole-tone notes. Such a scale consists of only 6 notes.
Whole-tone scale
Motif
Scherzo
Triplet
8. A composition written for three to six voices. Beginning with the exposition - each voice enters at different times - creating counterpoint with one another.
Clavier
Fugue
Quintet
Romantic
9. A solo concert with or without accompaniment.
Pentatonic Scale
Parody
Recital
Rigaudon
10. Three note chords consisting of a root - third - and fifth.
Sextet
Triad
Triplet
Prelude
11. A composition written for a solo instrument. The soloist plays the melody while the orchestra plays the accompaniment.
Concerto
Cantata
Impromptu
Root
12. Where the musical themes and melodies are developed - written in sonata form.
Round
Symphony
Development
Septet
13. Ability to determine the pitch of a note as it relates to the notes that precede and follow it.
Rondo
Relative pitch
Dynamics
Tonic
14. A drama where the words are sung instead of spoken.
EnharmonicInterval
Verismo
Grave
Opera
15. Vocal composition written for three or more solo parts - usually without instrumental accompaniment.
Madrigal
Recital
String Quartet
Glee
16. A contrapuntal song written for at least three voices - usually without accompaniment.
Minor
Madrigal
Trill
Cantata
17. Music composed such that each note is used the same number of times.
Twelve-tone music
Dynamics
Reprise
Verismo
18. An extended solo - often accompanying the vocal part of an aria.
Virtuoso
Obbligato
Notation
Soprano
19. A tempo having slow movement; restful at ease.
Adagio
Sharp
Form
Rigaudon
20. A form of Italian opera beginning at the end of the 19th century. The setting is contemporary to the composer's own time - and the characters are modeled after every day life.
Chorus
Verismo
Ornaments
Grandioso
21. A sequence of songs - perhaps on a single theme - or with texts by one poet - or having continuos narrative.
Tonality
Musicology
Cantabile
Song cycle
22. A musical scale having five notes.For example: the five black keys of a keyboard make up a pentatonic scale.
Classicism
Coda
Fermata
Pentatonic Scale
23. A 17th century dance written in Quadruple time - always beginning on the third beat of the measure.
Harmony
Triplet
Gavotte
Chord progression
24. Two notes that differ in name only. The notes occupy the same position.For example: C sharp and D flat.
Exposition
Sextet
Sharp
EnharmonicInterval
25. The seventh note of the scale where there is a strong desire to resolve on the tonic.
Klangfarbenmelodie
Leading note
Quintet
Treble
26. The element of music pertaining to time - played as a grouping of notes into accented and unaccented beats.
Octet
Staccato
Rhythm
Concert master
27. Time signature with three beats to the measure.
Round
Triple time
Pizzicato
Leitmotif
28. A direction to play expressively.
Vivace
Gavotte
Intonation
Espressivo
29. The period of music history which dates from the mid 1800's and lasted about sixty years. There was a strong regard for order and balance.
Classicism
Tessitura
Reed
Drone
30. A melodic or - sometimes a harmonic idea presented in a musical form.
Motif
Rococo
Exposition
Theme
31. An instrumental lament with praise for the dead.
Scherzo
Elegy
Tuning
Pastoral
32. The technique of altering the tone color of a single note or musical line by changing from one instrument to another in the middle of a note or line.
Klangfarbenmelodie
Leitmotif
Capriccio
Sextet
33. A sequence of chords that brings an end to a phrase - either in the middle or the end of a composition.
Tutti
Chamber music
Cadence
Modulation
34. One of two or more parts in polyphonic music. Voice refers to instrumental parts as well as the singing voice.
Voice
Serenade
Stretto
A cappella
35. Written for 2 to 10 solo parts featuring one instrument to a part. Each part bears the same importance.
Capriccio
Chamber music
Dynamics
Ricercar
36. The voice between soprano and alto. Also - in sheet music - a direction for the tempo to be played at medium speed.
Tutti
Development
Mezzo
Carol
37. A song of praise and glorification. Most often to honor God.
Orchestra
Slide
Capriccio
Hymn
38. Pleasing combination of two or three tones played together in the background while a melody is being played. Harmony also refers to the study of chord progressions.
Coda
Scordatura
Harmony
Symphony
39. One of the two modes of the tonal system. The minor mode can be identified by the dark - melancholic mood.
Cantata
Castrato
Recapitulation
Minor
40. The interval between two notes. Two whole tones and one semitone make up the distance between the two notes.
Coda
Sequence
Fourth
Tablature
41. A short piece originally preceded by a more substantial work - also an orchestral introduction to opera - however not lengthy enough to be considered an overture.
Prelude
Tablature
Key signature
Pastoral
42. Initially an improvised cadence by a soloist; later becoming an elaborate and written out passage in an aria or concerto - featuring the skills of an instrumentalist or vocalist.
Song cycle
Chromatic scale
Cadenza
Requiem
43. Music written for chorus and orchestra. Most often religious in nature.
Cantata
Madrigal
Root
Accelerando
44. A musical theme given to a particular idea or main character of an opera.
Partita
Quadrille
Concerto
Leitmotif
45. Introduction to an opera or other large musical work.
Suite
Grazioso
Overture
Notation
46. The tonal characteristics determined by the relationship of the notes to the tone.
Tonality
Cantabile
Unison
Whole note
47. A period in history dating from the 14th to 16th centuries. This period signified the rebirth of music - art - and literature.
Harmony
Carol
Slide
Renaissance
48. A line in a contrapuntal work performed by an individual voice or instrument.
Sequence
Part
Pitch
Notation
49. Music composed such that each note is used the same number of times.
Tune
Chant
Twelve-tone music
Grazioso
50. A piece of music written for two vocalists or instrumentalists.
Classicism
Notation
Duet
Triplet